Negligence in Public Liability Claims: How Irish Law Determines Fault After a Premises Accident
Author: Gary Matthews, Principal Solicitor, Law Society of Ireland PC No. S8178 • 3rd Floor, Ormond Building, 31–36 Ormond Quay Upper, Dublin D07 • 01 903 6408 •
Negligence in public liability claims is the legal basis for holding an occupier responsible when their failure to take reasonable care causes injury to a visitor on premises in Ireland. Under the Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 (as amended in 2023), courts assess negligence through four elements: duty of care, breach of duty, causation, and damage.
Summary: Negligence in public liability claims means the occupier or person responsible for a premises failed to take reasonable care to prevent foreseeable harm. Since 31 July 2023, the Occupiers' Liability Act requires courts to weigh five specific factors when deciding if an occupier breached their duty, including the cost of precautions and the probability of injury.
At a glance: An occupier is negligent when they fail to take reasonable care and that failure causes injury. Since 2023, courts must consider: probability of danger, probability of injury, severity of possible injury, cost of precautions, and social utility of the activity. Sources: Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 (Revised, 2026), amended by Courts and Civil Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023.
Important: This is general information about Irish law, not legal advice. Every case depends on its own facts. If you've been injured on someone else's premises, contact a solicitor for advice specific to your situation.
Quick answers
Contents
What negligence means in a public liability claim
A customer slips on a wet floor in a supermarket. A child trips on a broken tile in a shopping centre. A hotel guest falls on a poorly lit staircase. Each of these scenarios raises the same legal question: did the occupier fail to take reasonable care, and did that failure cause the injury?
Negligence is the legal concept that connects an occupier's conduct to a claimant's injury. It is not enough that an accident happened on someone's premises. The claimant must show that the person responsible for the premises fell below the standard of care that a reasonable occupier would have met in the same circumstances. This standard comes from both common law principles and the Occupiers' Liability Act 1995, which was significantly amended in July 2023.
Irish negligence law in premises cases operates on two tracks. The Occupiers' Liability Act governs liability for dangers due to the state of the premises itself, such as defective flooring, loose handrails, or uneven surfaces. "Danger" is defined in the Act specifically as "a danger due to the state of the premises" (OLA 1995, s.1 (Revised, 2026)). Where a hazard creates a dangerous condition on the premises (such as a spill making a floor slippery), the OLA applies to that dangerous state. However, the operational failure that allowed the hazard to persist, such as staff not cleaning the spill promptly or a shop not following its own inspection schedule, is typically assessed under general negligence principles at common law. Many public liability claims in Ireland involve both tracks, and understanding which applies to your situation affects how negligence is proved.
The four elements of negligence
Every negligence claim in Ireland requires the claimant to prove four things on the balance of probabilities. If any element is missing, the claim fails.
1. Duty of care. The occupier or person responsible for the premises owed the claimant a duty of care. Under the Occupiers' Liability Act, an occupier owes a "common duty of care" to lawful visitors: a duty to take such care as is reasonable in all the circumstances to prevent injury from any danger on the premises (OLA 1995, s.3). For shops, hotels, restaurants, and other businesses open to the public, this duty is well established. The more contested question is usually breach, not duty.
One question that surprises clients: who exactly is "the occupier"? More than one occupier can exist for the same premises. In a shopping centre, the centre management company, the individual shop tenant, and the cleaning contractor may all be occupiers with different degrees of control over different areas. Under the OLA (s.1), the occupier is the person who exercises sufficient control over the premises to be responsible for its safety. The extent of each occupier's duty depends on their degree of control over the specific danger. Your solicitor will identify the correct defendant based on who controlled the area where you were injured.
2. Breach of duty. The occupier fell below the standard of care. This is where most public liability cases are won or lost. The court compares what the occupier did (or failed to do) against what a reasonable occupier would have done in the same situation. Since July 2023, the court must consider five specific factors when assessing breach.
3. Causation. The breach directly caused the claimant's injury. Irish courts apply the "but for" test: but for the occupier's failure, would the injury have occurred? A wet floor that the claimant never walked on cannot cause a slip. A broken step the claimant never used cannot cause a fall. The claimant must show a direct link between the specific failure and the specific injury. Consider a practical example: you slip on a spill in a supermarket aisle, but there was no warning sign. The "but for" question is whether you would have avoided the spill if a sign had been present. If you were looking at your phone and would have walked through the area regardless of any sign, the occupier's failure to place a sign may not have caused your fall, which weakens the causation element even if breach is clear.
4. Damage. The claimant suffered measurable harm, whether physical injury, psychological injury, or financial loss. Minor inconvenience without actual harm does not support a claim. Medical records, treatment costs, and evidence of lost earnings all help establish this element.
How Irish courts assess breach of duty since 2023
The 2023 amendments changed the framework courts use to decide if an occupier was negligent. Before July 2023, the test was simply whether the occupier took "such care as is reasonable in all the circumstances." This left courts with broad discretion but little specific guidance.
The Courts and Civil Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023 inserted a new subsection into the Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 requiring courts to consider five factors when deciding whether an occupier met their duty. This structured test, the Five-Factor Breach Test, replaced the older open-ended "reasonable in all circumstances" approach:
| Factor | What it means in practice |
|---|---|
| Probability of a danger existing | Was the hazard likely to arise? A wet floor near an entrance on a rainy day is highly probable. A ceiling tile falling in a recently inspected building is not. |
| Probability of injury occurring | Even if a danger exists, how likely is it to cause harm? A small lip on a floor tile in a well-lit area may present low injury probability. |
| Probable severity of injury | A hazard near a staircase carries higher severity risk than one in a flat, carpeted area. |
| Practicability and cost of precautions | Could the occupier have removed or reduced the risk at reasonable cost? This operates as a practical sliding scale. Mopping a spill costs almost nothing, so failing to mop creates high negligence risk. Placing a warning cone costs a few euro. Resurfacing an entire car park costs thousands, so a court is less likely to find negligence for not doing it. The lower the cost of the precaution relative to the risk, the stronger the case for negligence. |
| Social utility of the activity | Does the activity creating the risk serve a useful purpose? A children's playground carries inherent risk, but its social value is high. |
These factors codify principles that the Court of Appeal established in Byrne v Ardenheath Company Limited [2017] IECA 293, where a woman slipped while walking from a car park to a footpath. The court held that the occupier's duty must be weighed against the visitor's own responsibility for their safety, the likelihood of the accident, the potential severity, and the cost of eliminating the risk. The 2023 Act put this balancing test on a statutory footing (Kennedys Law, 2023).
What this means for claimants: A fall on premises does not automatically prove negligence. You must show that the occupier could have taken practical, affordable steps to prevent the hazard and failed to do so. Evidence of what the occupier knew, when they inspected, and what they did (or didn't do) is now more important than ever.
Actual knowledge vs constructive knowledge of hazards
A detail that catches many claimants off guard: the occupier does not need to have actually seen the hazard for negligence to apply. Irish courts distinguish between actual knowledge (the occupier knew about the spill because a customer reported it) and constructive knowledge (the occupier should have known because a reasonable inspection system would have detected it). An occupier who says "I didn't know the floor was wet" can still be negligent if a proper cleaning schedule would have identified the hazard in time. The absence of any inspection system is often the strongest proof of constructive knowledge, because the occupier chose not to look.
Usual dangers vs unusual dangers: the practical test
Not every feature of a premises creates negligence liability. The Court of Appeal drew an important distinction in Lavin v Dublin Airport Authority plc [2016] IECA 268 between "usual" and "unusual" dangers.
A usual danger is a normal feature of the premises that a visitor can reasonably be expected to handle safely. A staircase, a ramp, or a kerb is a usual danger. People use these features every day without injury. The occupier does not need to eliminate them or place warning signs beside every step.
An unusual danger is a feature or condition that a visitor would not reasonably expect, and that the occupier must guard against or warn about. A loose handrail that gives way, a broken step concealed by poor lighting, or a wet floor with no warning sign are unusual dangers. These are the conditions that give rise to negligence liability.
The distinction matters because it sets the threshold for when liability begins. If you tripped on a clearly visible step in good lighting, the step itself is a usual danger that you were expected to manage. If you tripped because the step had a cracked edge concealed by shadow, that cracked edge is an unusual danger the occupier should have repaired or flagged.
Case in point: Scanlan v McDonnell [2024] IEHC 324. A visitor to a caravan park tripped over a power cable running from her caravan to a services post. The High Court (Coffey J.) held that service posts, cables, and their placement were normal features of a caravan park. The cable was a "usual danger" that a visitor could reasonably be expected to manage. The court dismissed the claim. This was the first reported High Court decision applying the usual/unusual danger distinction after the 2023 amendments took effect. It confirms that courts will apply the distinction strictly: everyday features of premises do not create occupier liability in Ireland, even when they cause injury (RDJ LLP, October 2024).
When the accident speaks for itself (res ipsa loquitur)
In some cases, the mere fact of the accident creates a presumption of negligence. Res ipsa loquitur, a Latin phrase meaning "the thing speaks for itself," applies where the circumstances strongly suggest that negligence occurred, even without direct evidence of what went wrong.
The doctrine applies when three conditions are met:
- The accident would not normally occur without negligence.
- The thing or condition that caused the injury was under the defendant's control.
- The claimant did not contribute to the accident.
In Ireland, when res ipsa loquitur applies, the defendant must prove they were not negligent. This is a stronger effect than in many other common law countries. The Irish courts treat it as placing the onus on the defendant to show that all reasonable care was taken (McMahon and Binchy, Law of Torts, 4th edn, 9.16).
A common example: a customer is walking through a well-maintained shop and a heavy item falls from a shelf and strikes them. The customer has no way of knowing why the item fell. Under res ipsa loquitur, the shop must explain what happened and demonstrate that it took reasonable precautions.
Practical note: Res ipsa loquitur doesn't guarantee a successful claim. The defendant can rebut the presumption by showing they had proper safety systems. However, if the defendant cannot explain the accident at all, the presumption stands. This doctrine is particularly relevant in falling object claims and cases where the exact cause of a hazard is unclear.
Contributory negligence: what happens if you were partly at fault
A claimant's own carelessness does not destroy a public liability claim, but it reduces the compensation. Under Section 34 of the Civil Liability Act 1961, the court reduces damages by whatever proportion it considers just and equitable, based on the claimant's share of fault.
A claimant found 25% responsible receives 75% of the assessed damages. A claimant found 50% responsible receives half. Courts in Ireland regularly apply reductions for behaviours such as not watching where you were walking when a hazard was partly visible, wearing unsuitable footwear, ignoring warning signs or barriers, or using a phone while walking in an area with known risks.
One point that catches many claimants off guard: your behaviour after the accident is also scrutinised. Under s.34(2)(b) of the Civil Liability Act 1961, a negligent or careless failure to mitigate your losses is treated as contributory negligence. Failing to attend medical appointments, refusing recommended treatment, or not returning to work when medically cleared can all reduce your award (Mason Hayes Curran, 2025).
Contributory negligence reduction calculator
Enter your estimated total damages and the percentage of fault attributed to you. The calculator shows the reduced award under Section 34 of the Civil Liability Act 1961. This is a general illustration only and does not constitute legal advice.
Your reduced award
€22,500
75% of €30,000 (reduced by 25% contributory negligence)
Voluntary assumption of risk: the complete defence since 2023
Since 31 July 2023, voluntary assumption of risk can eliminate the occupier's liability entirely. This is different from contributory negligence, which only reduces compensation.
New Section 5A of the Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 (inserted by the 2023 Act) provides that an occupier does not owe any duty to a visitor or recreational user in respect of risks they willingly accepted, where they were capable of understanding the nature and extent of those risks.
Three key changes make this defence more powerful than before. First, no written agreement is required: acceptance can be shown by the visitor's words or conduct, and a sign saying "enter at your own risk" may now suffice depending on the circumstances. Second, no communication with the occupier is required: the court can infer acceptance from the visitor's behaviour alone. Third, no contributory negligence apportionment applies: when voluntary assumption of risk is established, the occupier has no liability at all, and damages are not merely reduced (s.5A(4)).
This defence is particularly relevant in gym accident claims, swimming pool accident claims, and outdoor recreation scenarios, where visitors participate in activities with inherent risk. Defence solicitors have increasingly raised it since the 2023 Act commenced (William Fry, 2023).
What role do inspection systems and maintenance records play?
Inspection logs are often the strongest evidence in a negligence case, for either side. A well-documented inspection system can prove the occupier met the standard of care. Gaps in that system can prove they didn't.
Courts look at several aspects of an occupier's maintenance regime:
| Factor | What courts consider |
|---|---|
| Frequency of inspections | Were checks carried out at reasonable intervals? A busy shopping centre with heavy footfall should inspect more often than a small office. |
| Recording of inspections | Were inspections logged with dates, times, and the inspector's name? Missing entries or unsigned logs undermine the occupier's defence. |
| Response to identified hazards | When a hazard was found, how quickly was it addressed? A spill noted in a log but not cleaned for an hour weakens the occupier's position. |
| Absence of any system | No inspection system at all is often the strongest indicator of negligence. The occupier cannot claim to have met the standard of care without any checks. |
CCTV footage serves a similar function. It can show how long a hazard existed before the accident, whether staff walked past it without acting, and whether warning signs were in place. CCTV evidence in public liability claims is frequently decisive, but footage is typically retained for only 7 to 30 days. Request preservation promptly.
The timing matters more than most guides suggest: the gap in a cleaning log often matters more than what's in it. If you slipped at 2pm and the last inspection entry was at 11am, that three-hour gap is the evidence. It shows the occupier had no system capable of detecting the hazard in a reasonable timeframe. Conversely, a log showing inspection at 1:45pm, fifteen minutes before your accident, makes breach much harder to prove.
Where negligence is typically contested by accident type
Different types of premises accidents raise different negligence questions. The table below maps five common accident types to the element most frequently disputed in Irish claims.
| Accident type | Element usually contested | Key question in practice |
|---|---|---|
| Wet floor in a supermarket | Breach | Did the store have an adequate inspection system, and did it follow it? |
| Trip on a broken footpath | Duty (identity of occupier) | Is the local authority or the adjacent business responsible for this section? |
| Fall on a hotel staircase | Breach (usual vs unusual danger) | Was the staircase defective, or was this a "usual danger" the guest should have managed? |
| Child injured on playground equipment | Breach (standard adjusted for children) | Was the equipment defective or poorly maintained, and did the occupier account for child users? |
| Falling object in a shop | Causation (res ipsa loquitur may apply) | Was the item under the shop's control, and would it have fallen without negligence? |
Early steps that protect your negligence claim
Notify the occupier in writing as soon as practicable after the accident. Under Section 8 of the Civil Liability and Courts Act 2004, you should send written notice (by registered post) to the person or business you hold responsible, detailing what happened and where. Citizens Information (2026) recommends doing so within one month. Failure to give prompt notice does not destroy your claim, but it can affect the court's decision on legal costs if proceedings follow. This requirement applies separately from the IRB application and from the two-year limitation period.
What negligence means for your claim
Understanding negligence connects the legal theory to your practical situation. Here's what each element means in terms of what you need to do:
| Legal element | What it means for you | What to gather |
|---|---|---|
| Duty of care | This is usually straightforward in public liability cases. If you were lawfully on the premises, the occupier owed you a duty. | Proof you were there lawfully (receipt, booking, ticket, witness) |
| Breach of duty | You must show the occupier fell below a reasonable standard. The five 2023 factors guide this assessment. | Photos of the hazard, inspection logs (or their absence), witness accounts, CCTV |
| Causation | You must link the specific breach to your specific injury. | Medical records connecting your injury to the accident, GP referral, A&E records |
| Damage | You must show real, measurable harm. | Treatment records, receipts, evidence of lost earnings, psychological evidence if relevant |
If negligence is established, compensation is assessed under the Judicial Council's Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021, current) for general damages (pain and suffering), plus any special damages such as medical expenses, lost earnings, and travel costs. The Injuries Resolution Board (IRB, formerly the Personal Injuries Assessment Board or PIAB) assesses most public liability claims before court proceedings begin.
According to the IRB 2024 Annual Report (July 2025), there were 4,780 public liability claims submitted in 2024, unchanged from 2023 and over 40% lower than 2019. The median public liability award was €13,660, down 34% from 2020 levels. Public liability accounted for 13% of all IRB awards. Half of all IRB assessments were accepted by both parties in 2024, meaning many negligence claims resolve without going to court. The IRB launched mediation for public liability claims on 8 May 2024 (gov.ie, May 2024), with average resolution times of three months compared to 11.2 months for standard assessment.
The next step is to decide whether to accept an IRB assessment or proceed to court. Your solicitor can advise on whether the assessment reflects the strength of your evidence and the severity of your injuries. Learn more about public liability compensation in Ireland.
What happens in different scenarios
If the hazard was clearly unusual and well-documented: Strong evidence of an unusual danger (broken tile, concealed spill with no warning) combined with medical records and CCTV typically supports a straightforward negligence claim through the IRB. At this point, you'll need to decide whether to accept the IRB assessment or reject it and proceed to court.
If the occupier argues the danger was "usual": The occupier may defend by arguing the feature was a normal part of the premises (a step, a kerb, a slope) that you should have managed safely. The 2023 Act's five-factor test determines whether this argument succeeds.
If you were partly at fault: Contributory negligence under Irish law reduces your compensation proportionally but does not eliminate your claim. A 20% finding of contributory negligence means you receive 80% of the assessed damages. This leads to the question of how compensation is calculated and what level of reduction is likely.
Ireland vs the UK: a key difference
Irish negligence law and English/Welsh negligence law share common roots but have diverged in important ways. If you've read UK-focused legal content, be aware of these distinctions:
- The governing legislation differs. Ireland applies the Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 (as amended 2023). England and Wales apply the Occupiers' Liability Act 1957 and 1984. The statutory duties and visitor categories are different.
- Res ipsa loquitur is stronger in Ireland. In Ireland, the doctrine generally requires the defendant to prove they were not negligent. In England, it typically only creates an inference that can be rebutted.
- Contributory negligence operates similarly in both jurisdictions but under different statutes (Civil Liability Act 1961 in Ireland, Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945 in England).
- Compensation is assessed differently. Ireland uses the Judicial Council's Personal Injuries Guidelines (since April 2021). England and Wales use the Judicial College Guidelines. Award levels differ.
References
- [1] Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 (Revised March 2026), Law Reform Commission
- [2] Courts and Civil Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023, Irish Statute Book
- [3] Civil Liability Act 1961, s.34 (Revised March 2026), Law Reform Commission
- [4] Personal Injuries Guidelines (Adopted March 2021, current), Judicial Council
- [5] Making a Claim (Updated 2026), Injuries Resolution Board
- [6] Injuries Resolution Board (Updated 2026), Citizens Information
- [7] Overview of Changes to Irish Occupiers' Liability Act (August 2023), Kennedys Law
- [8] Changes to Occupiers' Liability in Ireland (September 2023), William Fry
- [9] Occupiers Liability Case Law Update (October 2024), RDJ LLP, citing Scanlan v McDonnell [2024] IEHC 324
- [10] Annual Report 2024 (July 2025), Injuries Resolution Board
- [11] Mediation for Public Liability Claims Commenced (May 2024), gov.ie
Related topics
Public liability claims Ireland • Duty of care in public liability claims • Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 explained • How to prove a public liability claim • Evidence for public liability claims • CCTV evidence in accident claims • Public liability compensation Ireland • Slip, trip, and fall claims • Supermarket accident claims • Hotel accident claims • Local authority claims • School accident claims • Time limit for public liability claims • Public liability solicitor Dublin
Common questions
Does an accident on premises automatically mean the occupier was negligent?
No. An accident on someone's premises does not prove negligence by itself. The claimant must show that the occupier failed to take reasonable care and that this failure caused the injury. Since 2023, courts weigh factors including the probability of danger, the severity of potential injury, and the cost of precautions.
Why it matters: Many people assume that falling in a shop means the shop is liable. The legal test is more specific than that.
Next step: Occupiers' Liability Act 1995 • How to prove a public liability claim
How do you prove negligence in a public liability claim in Ireland?
Prove all four elements: duty of care (usually established by your lawful presence), breach of duty (the occupier fell below the reasonable standard), causation (the breach caused your injury), and damage (you suffered real harm). Evidence typically includes photographs, CCTV footage, inspection logs, witness statements, and medical records.
Why it matters: Missing evidence for even one element can defeat a valid claim.
Next step: Evidence for public liability claims • CCTV evidence
Can I still claim if I was partly at fault for my accident?
Yes. Under Section 34 of the Civil Liability Act 1961, contributory negligence reduces your compensation but does not bar your claim. The court assesses the degree of fault attributable to each party and reduces damages proportionally. A claimant found 30% at fault receives 70% of the damages.
Why it matters: Some people assume shared fault means no claim. Irish law takes a proportional approach.
Next step: Civil Liability Act 1961, s.34 • Compensation guide
How long do I have to bring a negligence claim?
Two years from the date of the accident, or from the "date of knowledge" (the date you became aware of the injury and its connection to the accident). Special rules apply for children, whose two-year period does not begin until they turn 18. A parent or guardian can bring the claim earlier. Once you file with the IRB, the two-year clock pauses under Section 50 of the Personal Injuries Assessment Board Act 2003 and remains suspended until the IRB process concludes.
Why it matters: Missing the deadline usually means losing the right to claim entirely.
Next step: Time limit for public liability claims • Citizens Information
Do warning signs protect the occupier from negligence claims?
Warning signs help demonstrate reasonable care but do not automatically eliminate liability. If a hazard could have been removed at reasonable cost, a sign alone may not be enough. Conversely, the 2023 Act introduced voluntary assumption of risk as a complete defence. If a visitor willingly accepted a risk they understood, the occupier may have no liability, even without a written agreement.
Why it matters: Warning signs are one factor, not a guarantee of protection for either side.
Next step: OLA 1995, s.5A • Evidence guide
Do I need a solicitor for a negligence claim?
You are not legally required to use a solicitor for a public liability claim. However, negligence cases involve specific legal tests, evidence requirements, and procedural deadlines. Most claims must first go to the Injuries Resolution Board. A solicitor can assess whether negligence is provable, gather and present evidence, and advise on whether an IRB assessment is fair.
Why it matters: The legal test for negligence involves multiple elements. Missing one can defeat a claim that otherwise had merit.
Next step: Speak with a Dublin public liability solicitor • How to make a public liability claim
What is res ipsa loquitur and how does it help my claim?
Res ipsa loquitur ("the thing speaks for itself") is a legal doctrine that creates a presumption of negligence where the accident would not normally happen without someone being at fault, the thing causing the injury was under the defendant's control, and the claimant did not contribute to the accident. In Ireland, this generally places the burden on the defendant to prove they were not negligent. It is particularly relevant in falling object cases and incidents where the cause of the hazard is unclear.
Why it matters: You don't always need to prove exactly what went wrong. Sometimes the accident itself is the evidence.
Next step: Falling object claims • How to prove a claim
Is the negligence standard different for children on premises?
Yes. Occupiers are expected to take greater care for child visitors, because children are less able to appreciate danger and protect themselves. A hazard that an adult could reasonably avoid might still create liability if a child is injured by it. This is particularly relevant in school accident claims, playground claims, and creche injury claims.
Why it matters: The "reasonable care" standard adjusts based on who is on the premises.
Next step: Child public liability claims • Time limits (special rules for minors)
Disclaimer: This page provides general information about negligence in Irish public liability law. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied on as a substitute for advice from a qualified solicitor. Every claim depends on its own facts and circumstances. If you've been injured, contact a solicitor promptly to protect your rights and meet limitation deadlines.
Gary Matthews Solicitors
Medical negligence solicitors, Dublin
We help people every day of the week (weekends and bank holidays included) that have either been injured or harmed as a result of an accident or have suffered from negligence or malpractice.
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